0.5 stars (out of four)What we said: "In a glorious, alternate world where no one has seen an Adam Sandler Movie (ASM)—at least, the recent ones that crystallized the ASM into a smug, hateful up-yours to viewers—citizens would see “Pixels” and hurt themselves trying to determine how this guy got the role. They’d freak out wondering why someone with no comic timing or chemistry with other actors would star in a comedy, where his character so frequently and lazily insults people that his name should be Judgy McDickFace." -- Matt Pais

0.5 stars (out of four)What we said: "In a glorious, alternate world where no one has seen an Adam Sandler Movie (ASM)—at least, the recent ones that crystallized the ASM into a smug, hateful up-yours to viewers—citizens would see “Pixels” and hurt themselves trying to determine how this guy got the role. They’d freak out wondering why someone with no comic timing or chemistry with other actors would star in a comedy, where his character so frequently and lazily insults people that his name should be Judgy McDickFace." -- Matt Pais

Not that you needed another reason to drool over "The Dark Knight Rises,"but here's one more: The conclusion to Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy (opening July 20) will feature more than an hour of IMAX footage, Nolan told the Wall Street Journal.

That virtually assures an added sense of hugeness to a movie that was already guaranteed to be big at the box office, though it's unlikely Nolan will attempt something quite as grand as director Brad Bird's scene of Tom Cruise dangling outside the Burj Khalifa in Dubai (only the tallest building in the world) in "Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol." Nolan's thrills more often come from crispness than a sense of scale (talking more about his Batman movies than "Inception" here), though that's not to say that the "Rises" scene of Bane (Tom Hardy) demolishing a football field and everyone on it won't look massive and terrifying, if in fact that's one of the scenes receiving the IMAX treatment. Considering it's pretty chilling to see in a YouTube window that's approximately 1/1,000,000 the size of the IMAX screen. (Note: No math was involved in the previous statement.)